. . . - mii I ii jiii uiaijimap, Jl limit 5'r rnw iW r v J. H. LARRIMER, ) .... R. PENT WAHD, Jr., f Edlt VOL Villi. NO 2G. Terms of Subscript ion. ffptf.tl in aihaneo, or within thro months, $1 25 If paid any timo within tho your, ... 1 ;,o fjmij after tho expiralinn of thu year, . 2 UU Terms of Advertising;. Advnrtisomciitii aro inverted in tho Koublirnii kt tlra following rates : 1 Insertion. One ifiuat, (14 linen,) $ in Two Kquari-s, (2S linfi",) 100 Tbreo niuares, (-12 Itucs.) 50 2 do. $ 75 1 50 2 00 3 .lo. $1 00 2 00 2 50 .' month, fi iuo'h. 1 2 mo Ono Square, : : ; : $2 40 Twoiquarn, : : : : : 4 till Thro iquaren, : : : 5 00 Four iqnarci, : : : : (1 (III Half a column, : : : : 8 00 $4 no fi 00 8 00 10 00 12 00 $7 U0 10 00 12 00 1 I 00 1 S 00 i :(; no ' One column, : : : : 1 1 00 20 00 Ov.tr thrco weeks nn-1 Ics than three months 25 "' 1 -1 ' miimed lile, ho .n f ents uer square for oneh insertion. j chased a pleasant residence for her, and Lusiuoisn notices not exceeding S lines are in - erti'd for $2 a venr. Advertisoinmils not marked with the nuinher of insertions desired, will h continued till forbid ami charged according to thee terms. BAlihMMFK & VAIU. SELECT rOETRY. MOAit tup. i,aki: i!!.ni;i)Ho)ii:i thi:ivii.i.(v. r cKoiKiF p. Moiling. Near the lul;p vhere drooped the willow, I.i.ng time n;r, Where the rock throws hack the billow, Driirhter than snow Iwelt a maid, huloved and cherished, 1 5 v bih n ml loir : .Hut with iiutuiun's leuf fho perf-lnd, Li-time n jo I Hock, and tree, and flowing water, Long timo a;;o Ilird, nnil bee. and blo.snin tnuglit her, Love's je!l In know, While to iry fond wools she lis'incd, Muiimirii'K low, Tenderly hgr dove eves glistened, Long time n:o. Mingled were our hearts forever Long time no, Csn I now lorgit her? Never! Ko, lost one ! no ! To those her gone tlio-o te.'irs are given, Kver to flou Flif's the sta- I missel from henven, Long time ngo. Ftom the XiUiohid The Wifs's Mistake. The carriage stopped at the door a lew minutes, .Margaret Hale end r itpnrtmeiit w here her hiishiind cut, w holly fi!)sorhed in poring over ilay-hooKs and ledgers. "Those tiresfinie accounts still," .-he e. dainied. "H'ill you never Iind lime for anything else but business, Ralph ' Have you no taste tor any thing I eyond liL-urts?" "Margaret !" but the sadness in the tone was unheeded, as she continued "Wis had Mich a charming veiling r.t Mrs. C"., t'npt. Hill related many interest ing incidents of his residence, in Egypt, and Mr. Warren, the famous young poet, read "Maud" and some of the most beau tiful passages in "Aurora Leigh," 1 must read to you some of lionmey's Groat Thoughts on duty." She went hastily to her chamber for the volume. When she rettunul In r ijtiiet entrance was unheud by her husband, whoso pen was rapidly moving along tho almost interminable columns of figures. With'an impression of impatience, almost ff scorn, letting on her face, she hastily turned away. "And this is the end of all my dreams of marriage," said she on reaching her room. "He has a taste forth tidgery. Ilis pur suits and tastes are all common-place, and 1 need, to Iind those who will appreciate, with me, the books l.love, and the beauti ful in art, for which he has neither eye nor ear. Why did he not marry a woman who hud neither heart nor tnind to be con tinually unsatislied ?" In the room she had left. Ihiloh Hide ! fat hour after hour, till his brain was wen- "' yes, I am safe indeed, now," said ry an I hU eyelids drooped. Then laying Margaret's heart. nide his books, he remained a long 'time tn;,t '10UI' v,as clear bf fween them in deep thought. With new resolves for the future, with "God bless my Margaret," he prayed, ! deeper love 'or each other, and a prayer "and give me slrenght to bear all things, j Tor strength, another page of life was tur Give me pow or t make her happy." j ned for them. Tutting far away all thoughts of Imr : rs alti-rwards, Margaret, a proud husband's red nobleness of character, jcnl-! hajpy wife, wrote : "I cannot tell you ousy jrcserving the memory of every slight ' ho has been to me my guide when I difference in t heir tates and pursuits. : was ignorant, mv strength when I faultor Margaret cbeii-bed the fpirit of disron-: 'd, my best earthly friend always. What tent, till it oinlsittered every hour of her'" ' uot owe you forrovealimrthe mistake life, and sent sttll'ering she never dreamed " l'i'h had Almost wrucked tho happiness of, to the heart of her husband, who would of both." gladly have sacrificed every earthly good j ' for her hnppjiness. i Ork.in of tu::( iid 1'i-i.i.ows. .Vany per- A sudden and severe ill came to her, I 'oils whe are under the impression that while Hal ph was inn distant city. Une'the society of Odd-Fellows is an origina day during her slow recovery, the tiged ! tion of modern times w ill be somewhat minister ho had babtized her in inf'uti-i uriri?ol to learn that iu origin dates as cy, was siuihig by her side. far back as the time of Nero, mid was e- "Marparet," ho said, after Mcadilv I tablished by Ihe IJoinan soldiers in the watching her troubled face, "you are very year 55. At that time they were o il!, d unhappy. 1 have seen it a long time. - "Fellow citizens," the present name being should not recognize in you my once i f-'iven them by Titus ('a sm- twenty-fo'ir cheerful anil happy child. May I not years afterwards, and they wen- so called know what grout sorrow has come to you ?" ' fi'"'" singular character of their meetings, J'hen with sobs and tears she told him ! mul from their knowing each other by nil her unhappiness. night or day by means of JJaiystical signs After a short silence, the old nitin snoko 1 language. !t the same time be lmmu- agnin ; mm more was. sanness, almost ssternness in his voice. "Years ago Mar garet a wealthy New York merchant be--came involved in u speculation, whose fail jjrp suddenly took from him, the ueoiimu Ua.ed wealth of his yearn of coiinnercial entefprise. There wero a few years of iweury vain strucglings to regain what he Hind lost, then deep despondency, a ling- -.ering (lisoaso and death. II is wife and -.four vhihh'cn wero left pennyless. The eldest child, a boy of sixteen, had finished ;his preparatory studies, and was about to .enter college. ISy this stroke, he found -Jhat his prospect for tho future weie .clouded; but with a noblo self-forget ful ness ho turned cherfully into the way fate had marked out for hini, und walked reso Jutely into it. , He. obtained a tfituntionwdth a merchant, t & Publishers. W'ho had known his fat her. whore his fait h fiilhoss and untiring devotion to liis du I H-s, won the-confidence (.fall who know him. 1 n i-i i ir the first years of her w idow hood, tho mother lnd' taught a private school fur young ladies; and it was the boy's highest ambition to relievo her of this necessity, iind give her tho rest her feeble health required. I cannot tell von all his jjiivntions, his willing sm-riti- of every roireatinn, his cotitintied self denial, that ho im'ght lighten the burden of those so dear to him. Year niter year success crowned his of forts. In tho village when' his mother had pa ised the years of her childhood and 1 then, a lucrative business heiii!! opi lied ! to him in the west he came here. At the tune of his arrival here, accident revealed to him the fact that the widow and invalid daughter of one whoso fortune was hy his father's advice, risked in that unfortunate speculation which had so changed his own life, were living in ex treme poverty, To him the are indebted for the pleasant homo that now shelters them, and for the delicate thoughtful min- ratiou to their daily comfort. Now, when the commercial world is clouded, and disinters crowd thick and fa-t upon him, as upon others, his anxious thoughts tin n to (in- mother ami Milier ing sister, in the iitl e villa.:e home u ho--c eomlort depends in en him, lo the oilier lonely li;e-idf, to which hi.- tliong,tfi;liie'.s imparts its only ligiit, and to l.is r,u n home, and t he young wi'e whose l.aepi ness is de.'ier to hini than hie. For tiiis Margaret, 1,'alph Hale gives hi-day to in cessant toil, and willingly suci iliees Vjeial Jle.'i-ures he is eliiilirnily li'.'o'd to enjov. 1 1imu heeii i:i the-c t i.i ie iaimi s. Willi a love that is almost reverence, his moth er and sister speak his name, and with lull heart thank h d for his lil'i that life so filled with tin- Leant y ol self-K nimoiatii n. The widow and d nighter whose hearts lie lias made glad. t 1! of nunihei less nets of kindness, of his delicate i.nd uneea.sing watehl'tilness, and daily th. y a-k God's blessing on him whose life is a Lle:.s;ng to others. J In his own hen should bless hini, sho'.ild comfort turns coldly i.nd heeaiiM? he prefer ei.s to his own pi liressinc duties of r, th'1 wii'e who. e love j w hose ceiitle initiistrv ; Pin liii! i th itilii lile 1 st; '('lU't lien I. on. I him, ! ( eoli: lv from ' hfiipine-'i of ot! itii.n, 1 vaii:e tl cliiitu a ilful. hours, leaviii'.' hini 1 tils' claims ill's" i"-iv itle h'!--.-.' time li.r or for the iiigli inte!- le tual iii'iuiv viin l liiv att.vm w ilt. lives are not wholly t!evited to it." "Oh Kalph. I hav e never known von! I have so cruelly mi-judgedyiai," said the weeping wife. "The old man continued: "Some men talk poetry, some write it in words, and ionic write it in their lives. The true he roism which poets have sung, the 1 eauty cf sol. -abnegation .md of eca:-elo.-s devotion to duty, w hich have been their inspira tion, lhdph Hale has lived. The woman who has won the deepest love of such a heart should reverently and gratefully cherish it, as the richest blessini: of her life." In the twilight of that day, Margaret was awaiting her husband's return. A mid the bitter self reproaehings Uia dark ened the hour, gleamed a now and holy light. Higher urposes were aroused within her. In the future she would make divinely real in her life, the beau tiful ideas which had filled her heart with unsatisfied longings. Nh", too, would live for others, and first of all for him whom she had so misunderstood. A hurried step in the entrance-hall, then on the stairs, and the next moment she was clasped in her husband's arms. "You have been very ill, (s.iid ,t voice faultering with emotion.) but thank 'foil. von are safe now, mv Margaret. ; ted them a dispensation, engraved o:i a phito of gold, bearing different emblems i f morality. In the filth century the older j was established in the Spanish dominions, j and in Portugal in the sixth century. It Ut not reach 1-riincc and Midland until tho eleventh century. It was then estab lished in the latter country by John de Nevillw who, assisted by five knights frotn France formed a Grand bodgo in London. This ancient fraternity has now its lodges in every quarter of the globe, and by its usefulness 'ind benevolent character, com mands the respect and countenance of nil who are acquainted withitu nature and purpos.es. Iy-It is not well, says Henry Ward Beecher, for men to pray cream and live skim-milk. "KXf'KLSIo!;." CLKAKI IKLD, PA. WKI).KSI)Y .ID.N'K H, IfW!. A Visit to Mount Vernon. What American is there who does not feel n sacred interest in that sweet place, oil the shores of the otiiot I'lIohiuc. once 1 ennobled by Washington's presence, and now hallowed by his ashes? t!(. Mecca of the republic -a spot where her i pilgrim-sons come, with reverential hom age toslaml beneath the noble old trees whose shadow one fell on the broad and godlike brow of Washington himself! Our first visit to the Mount Vernon, two us ago, was in the golden flush of au t in n 1 well remember the crimson and russet robes of the ipiiet- Woods that fring ed the water side, and the ru le, narrow bridge, built far out in the river, over which We were compelled to pass before we could reach the shore, And then, the steep ascent tip thiough a scarcely tn d- j den path, whose outlines were scarcely dis cernable through the blight drifts of brown ami orange leaves which flutlered i down through the warm, blue air the liisset ferns, the . in pie asters, the gold en rods, whose Lory torches hung like : lilies of flame along the natural terraces land the sweet wild mini, whose IVagrnnoe (even now seem insepcfable from that ( lc j to her day at Mount Vernon ! I Hut this time it v 'as a bright winter noon, hen our little party stood oner IIH le l lithe f month '!;o.'i rue of (hope day when th" calender tel! ns it is )-'cb ru- ;ii. in oo, un.'oe cor,':-a'iii'i,.,n to the ra- 'lileiit s ky and warm b'-eeros that speak of' May itself, 'l'he sunny slopes and steep, i banks won.- a delicate t ingcof velvet green, j anil l nit lire "eeine I as it prepai mg for the light feet of t l.o ceiiiing spring-time ! ! l'r ol a! ly no private residence in the I'nited States can boast a filler view than Mount Vernon, from the house a pros, pei-t is visible of t he broad, bright river, with ipiii-t sails glidinir slowly over its s mi n v expanse, and mile, on miles ol wooded shores, rising up from the water side, and forming one of the fines t natural panoramas imaginable. The house itself stacibona bit o'Vrnooth, level law n : a tiny opening in Ihe mid-t of the grand old trees, who-e interlaciiu: bl anches are so plainly outlined against the blue heavens; ami its old-fa-hii red portico, a sort ol continuation oi tlieeavcs. support--.! b I'i'i'o yet pi'-turi o io pillars. seo::is almost t'k' a mommy (,f the. past century. It is there, as the atti'iid.mts tell us, that the ariii-ch. ii-, of Washington was l'iught on summer evenings : it v.".s j over the .sunken stone ih' -s furmittt! it j pavv::;et that he was want to pace I'm hours : and wo ! ; with a species o( j,-1 ei.uion i n the :,''-'".-stones r litit have been I worn away by tic fee! of liashingt-m. j A wide, sunny old halt opens from this! portion, extending through from door to! don;- not a narrow modern entry, but a genuine old Virginia h.tH, which looks like : three or four spacious rooms thrown into mie, and hung w ith ouaint old maps of foreign count' ies, wJiich still look dim n ii'i.n you with their discolored lines, tliough he who once gazed on them has town. gone into an undiscovered country, of! which the world has neither man nor' pARACitiArm. The "note and miery do chart, .artnient in newspaper- "specially the The library, the parlor, the diningroom, literary hebdomadols furnishes a tedius are all jilnces of interest, but more pnrtie- ninount ol 'ignorance, imbecility, verdancy ulaily the former. (.Mice it must have been a splendid room ; the remains of its departed grandeur may sh!l be traced m its faded frescoes, dim oil-paintings, and massive chairs. It is id that this is the same furniture that adorned this library when Washington sat by the hearth, or perused the quaint pages of the weekly newspaper at tho open w indow. His fa vorite arm-chair stands just within the hall, and every' visitor who enters the lioi.se must, ol course, take a seat m it, to prove its identity Passing out at the br-ek door, we enter the gardens, which are not so attractive at this i-ca-on of the year, although, during tho summer, thev are kept iu excellent order. I'.iit the blight edirings of box which surround every llower-bed, and the cheerful evergreens have a plea-ant effect, bathed, lis they are; in the radicnt sun shine; and the green-houses at the left hand, though narrow and old-fashioned, are full of blu.-hing roses, camellias, geraniums, and azahas. Hero are exposed for sale tiny bouquets, arranged with the rare taste that all ne groes that seem intuitively to possess rob ios of Mount Vernon w hich are eigorly bought up, at exorbitant prices, by all pat riotic Yankees. At every available van tage-ground is aiso posted a gray-headed old negro with a bundle of sticks, over wnieii no continually ejaeuiiues Izenship. ion can imagine what a man "Nicehickory sticks, massarale Mount: must bo lo bo elected as such. Vernon wood ! lluv one, sah, to 'member Giueral Washington by '!" ( If course every one buys oneof these me momtoes, firmly believing in the old dar key's solemn psseveiat ion that th y tire "cur close to ie (iinerid's tomb,"altiioiigli we don't hesitate to say that if the Mount Vernon woods had 1 oenoiil down three or f ur times over, they wouldn't have yield, ed hall the iiumbir of "genuine hickory canes" that have been palmed oil' on un suspecting strangers by these sable deceiv ers ! Put the solemn old tomb itself! It is like a shrine, in its venerable age and un pretending simplicity. You can only see u structure of gray, mossy stone, with im iron gate, which forms the entrance iM'the family vault of the Washingtons. A situ pie sarcophagus is just visible inside, and there were the pleasant idutdows of the moving trees can just fall, slumber the hal lowed ashes of him who was the morning star of our republic. What a contrast lo the burial places of kings and coquerers He sleeps riot in the gloom of great cathedrals, or iu the light of consecrated tapers, among sculp tured effigies and sable plumes, but wrap ped in tho green anus of the fragrant earth, with the moving lioughs mid mur muring river for a diro. 7u grave is in the American nation, ecds HO lellL'lhv insei io- t ion or solemn c. i-emoiiii s to .-... . o i;i-,.' The red. level hght of sunset is hegining to checker the flm.r of the ol I portico as we d.-e. nd theslope on.-,-more. Wehave los' the idle niyety with which we climb C'l up a h w hours aos and w e step li-htlv in d speak softly, like the piL'l ims vonuu'a from the shadow of some old temple at .'crii-alcui. And as ,.. swilt little boat 1 ears us away over the calm waters f . rotomac, we look back rogril fully ,,t. the high elev.,!iou where thcsi.iiset is shiniie.' uowi. on tin- n.ossv lool of Mount V i riioii, n it t on Mrs, Hi ic tomb of Wa hin-toii, roia.i: Wasminhton U'vu linglon City, Feb., 1S0S. I.VS. A IIAF.D CU&T0MEII. A green 1 sign linn '.'in; thus "Win "king customer observed a over a grocery store, readi.ig esale and Ii'et'ail Stole '. He worked his way through the crowd of la dies and gentlemen until he got faeingone of tin- clerks who was exhibiting some tine sugais to u young lady, when he broke out with. "Say, Mister, ho's boss here ?" tie j topi ictor has just stepped out, ir. Well. this ; i 1'etaililiL' shoo ''" The cuing ma,, hardly com'. rehendiiiL' thf' giienv's thoughts, simply answered 'lis. sir ; a w tiolesah- and retail store." "tines yon understand your trade.,' " h ye-." replied the clerk, wrappim: up a bundle lor his lady customer, "what can I do for you ?" " M i ll as the cold weather is coming on, I thought I luought as well come ane give you a job." '1 don't understand you, stranger," re plied t he e'erk, who began to think that the lelloU wns in the via iil: box. "Zaetly so ; well. I'll tell you." "Kxplain what you mean, my friend," sal. I tt.-e clerk as he sow him bundle from under his oo it produce a "Well, sipiire, as I said befoie, the cold weather's coming on, mid I ihot' I might as well be fixin' for it. Come might j near freeiii' t'other w inter, tell ye 1 did, but," "Stianger, I hope you will tell what you want, so 1 may serve you," interrupted 'the ohrk. seeing there wen.- ft number of eu-i- l"!ue wailing to be served, b t wl Ill !a. t, l.a the rich 1 most i. er lorgott. n their errand.-. '.Kill oo'.ween the eh : ' 1 1 i li -( 'e do bti - lll'il! eli-t,.uiv. !::;nl;:, squire. Ocltaitily .ness iii a hurry, and ju- i.!.,. I. r w ;;: ,,-t y,,u u- tad J .of "e-u eeme (! )"; n h.i-e J -loii't wc;r '.,,i-..-i !' - t i.-y l.-t ima. I. ay. i'M' 't be described. ; I alway, i as, ouii 1, tiii-'c : : !.".! t'o .t .,- no, I Ml, I lists. bui'Ms , lo coiiv The 011". 1 laughter w hich follow eil ervrd nee the i.oor f, ih.u .e h .e h i 1 -itn-gs we: e put The- ht.-t Wi ll ear a laiiiii milieu niiiiseir, aii'l tils Ion-; in motion at the rate of l'. 111. saw of hini he was standiim : I -vt. itnmirin,' whether a shirt re-taiiing stole -r not there w,- uni'H here in the mipiid-nei and noiueii-e. The I'm Halo hqiubl.c devoirs hall a column, in bur lesque, of this sort of literatuie, and gives a b.t of ate wers to imaginary questions, which are exceedingly amusing. Tho fact of not publishing the questions', hut hav ing the reader to infer tli.mi from the an swers, greatly heightens the fun of the thing. Here are some specimens of tho 11 f,,,!,-'s replies to correspondents : Knquirer. The -Ith of duly does not oc- cur on the Ld ol rehruary, nor is it as you suppose, eommenioratire of imvthin.' thing that ever happened to the Kochestor 'moi. ! Uobortsnn. lie was not hid in the .Inn nail. h was under the bed. Mother. Keverse and spank. Kride. Victoria pins can be had at S (). Harnum's. Statistics. Seven times five are thirty five. Helen. You can keep them up with elastic-!. Medicus. Apply shoemaker's wax. and squeeze it. Oeoi'i-apher. Itoehe-ter is on the canal oast of bookport. Stumuckake. Fifteen drops enoh of laudanum and camphor, and rub it. Ambition. Very few men will descend o far. To be spoken of for Alderman in- , volves loss of reputation, friends and citi- De.uu.v eiss. Boring an editor while vriting. Boring an editor while not writing. Pending his exchanges without his nor. ! mission. I Asking his permission to read tho e. I changes. I Hooking his soi-'sors, when "original" I matter is wanted by the devil. Hooking Ids pen w hen he has selections to furnish. Paying profane hands on the proof. (.'mini's Wii.i.. The will of Governor Blaiiehard, of Plymouth, proved in 17Si5, contains the following singular clause: "I desire my body to be kept so long as it may not be offensive, and that one of my toes or fingers may be cut oil', to secure n certainty of my being dead. I further re quest my dear wife, that as sho has been troubled with one old fool, sho w ill not think of marrying a t-ceond." pAToniii.oits are not. n stupid as invol untary maidens would have us believe. One of these inveteiates being asked, the other day, why he did not secure some fond one's company in hits voyage on the ocean of life, replied, "I would, if I was sure an ocean would be Pacific. the wide heart of and his memory n i Tho Dttnrrhter of Aaron Burr. j AirCfp:dt., C- , ,'(.' l',H.-y'u.,; i J , Aii item if news just now going i In- ! rounds, relates tha; a sudor who receinlv (died in Texas coniessed on his death bed , thai he was one of anew of mutineers who some forty years ago took porses.-ion , -of a brig on its passage, Jfroin 'Inu-k-tni, to New York, and caused all the olliccrs ! and i-asscii's-rs to walk the t.hoil.- I'i.i-I I forlv J'cai-.s ills' Wlelciied mall had e.-n-iieil i i about w id l:...i , , .- , . ' in i in. ureaiiiui secret, aim , illed at hist in nil agony of despair. U'leo ;,.,.-,:;...,... i.k.: '. . . .. . , ' s"""""iiiii u.eiiuoiiai in ere-1 i , 1 ,r .,, i ., I r ., , , , i r is the fact that . he vesM-l referred to is the ' ' , ,1 Jmh 1-art oneon which Mrs. Theodocia Allston, the i . " " .' . ' ''. t'H-belov.-d dauuhter of Aaron liurr took T,as- ' "","''l'tel by bribes, sige for New York for the ,ur,", of! J';-' ''' enofit of tl, meeting her,, aunt in the darkest, lavs of ! . . V ',. ,' , T y" i1'1,'? his exis,e,,ce,ai,d which never hayintrbeen vV, ' ';;r f '',.k,",M i houtleddies." heard of, was supposed to have foundered 1 1 ' , lKU."xt car 11"'wt c"" atsin loitableol the tram, and with that stent The dying sailor I,rofe,s,-d to remember ! T'f" Vl - disli,l-"i1!t'd ' tho herwelf; s.dd . ha. 'she was the last who 1 '"''""'r'' '"' th"y towards myself, I nerislied. and. hat he io-v,',' V, , - , , . ,. ' d".t,:llJ'1"1'1 " 'to 't, cost what it mt he never forgot her s she took the hJ ste look of desnair as account I rei'iiiile.l if;. ..,;".. .F.,,.'..!l'',f'.11- ultl' 11 K'".v '"' honnet am conversing to day with an officer of the na- vy. he assures ,,c of its probable truth, ..nd slates that on one of his pnssa.es home some years ago, his vessel brought two pi- rates in irons, who were subseMcntlv L edited at Nuli ik for .eeent oH-nco.-. and who, la-lore their oxccution, oonfi that thev had been members of the i ame crew, and participated in the murder of Mis. Albton and her companions. What chiefly caused my scepticism on the subject was the fact that Mr. J'nrtoii, thereeo.it biographer of JUu r, leaves the fate of the daughter enveloped in myste ry, and closes the record of her noble and beautiful life with her embarkation on board the brig, w hich he declares has nev er since boon heard from 1 inn Kt a loss now to understand if the, confession alluded to by my naval friend was made public, as it undoubtedly was, how Mr. l'liiton could have failed, among his extensive and industrious, researches, to dis-over the fact. Whatever opinion may be entertained of the father, Ihe me mory of the daughter must ever le reve red as one of the loveliest and most excel lent of American women, and the n-vela- uon oi Her untimely late can only serve io inic.-i nun iiienioiy wiin a more u niier and melancholy interest, I'11!' ! l'rv. l'.kiW.vi.ow Noirni. :.u 1' .J.r 1 elerg' uiao, is (.ailed tho hi:. I eon. ' lie !.-. an pi-'.'opah.i;i, ; ; ... ,.?. ,-..- I,, , n 1.. I'.'V.'i' ii" !;n ' an o; en ;. . hat t ! Hi a i- j"Ct i. t-i 'h l;'el' ''. e -.; 1- fj.; pe' .a; e, which I e dots with ovorj v-wering , earn tne.-s. la-simuis Willi l.i;. ivy ;.n,l I even w ith cloy oi.' i.i; ics no llelio, t at i iiergetii-.il pie.'.-liin , but one doctrine to t x ale! di-avow s the minis authority. Jini such i carnestiioss, thut th says th;.t he has i. und and enforce, cria! char ictorai.d the fei vor of his lai'L'o-t I'di'iee ill ;i!a-'ou wa-. not capable of eonlai.iil the I multitudes who fioeked to hear hi in, lrom tlie highest to tho lowest, nor were twi liddlessci 011 Sabbath sllllleioiit to mod too demand upon Ins mimst rati-. ns.u hi I were continued throughout the week. Tin Presbyterian ministers of the Free Cli eh and United Pi e.-by tei ian Church, and one of the established clergy, admitted him ! to their pulpits ; and the ministers of all the churches received from the example ', of this good man a lesson on tho impor- . tanee of earnest preaching. Many inqui rers who had been awakened by the ad dresses of Mi'. North vi-ited and eoiiw rs- ' cd w ith him during the week. Ilis isit, there is reason to believe, was productive, of much spiritual food. This gentleman a few years ago was a terrible reprobate. , He had a shooting lodge in the Highlands 1 where, lio indulged in very loose and pro fligate practices. After his conversion, he j devoted his labors as a christian man ex clusively to those districts where he had formerly rendered himself most notorious and obnoxious by his profligacy. In hi- op pressions of self reproach, which of course i must be taken with considerable limita tion, he has repeatedly declared that ho had been guilty of all the sins in the deca logue except murder. Mr. North is no fanatic, lie is a calm-minded man, tho roughly imbued with Christian principle,1 and profoundly impressed with a sense, of the duty laid upon him of making known the great salvation. No preaching since the days of Whitfield, has produced such a powerful otl'eet upon the popular mind as this remai kable man's addresses; and their power lies not in their logical struc ' ture, butjn their earnestness. . I si: l i.kmv or iii.wi. Or. Ihxoii in a late number of '.he S i'pr', in an article on "l'iet." assuming the position that "the use of oil would decrease the victims of consumption nine tenths, and that this is the w hole secret of tlie success of cod-liver oil," quotes the following summary of ob servations on this subject, liiado by Ir lb.ok.-r: 1. Of all the persons borween the ages of fifteen and twenty-two. more than one filth oat no lat meat. 2. ( )f pcr-ons at the age of forty-five, all excepting less than one in fifty, use fat meat. 3. Of persons who, between the m'en of fifteen and twenty-two, avoid fat meat, a lew aequne an appetite, for it, and live to, a gooil old ago, w hile the greater portion die of phthisis before thirty-five. 4. Of persons dying with phthisis, be- ivi'i'ii me ages oi twelve und lortv five, ! nine-tenths, at least hare never uM fat meat. Mo.-t individuals who avoid fat meat, al- ""V ' V prc,Ht '"n,ir,,n''0 s ue little butter or oily gravies, tliough j , , ,' ' Charles) you "lust U him ninny compensate for this want, in purl at! ,"', ,, , least, l,y free u-e or those articles, and , li'lsln ' (' 'I'" other.) how soP' also milk, eggs, and various sachnrine sub- "P'caui'a you cannot retail him. stances. But they couslitute an impei.l CTruo love is ever accompanied witb feci substitute for tat nirt, without which ' fear and 1 r nre. '- --' -. -i- as. m,l f TERMS I 31 2 J per Annum. NKU'SKUIKS VO!4. II!. NO 21. sooner or 1 iter, the body is almost mire, to show the Libels of deficient calorification. How Jchn Phoenix Got in the Ladies' , Car. -"hn riuonix thus tells an ine'dent connected with a ride on the New York Central llaihc.id. He relates it in a letter to the Knickerbocker .Magazine, and put it on record to serve as caution to futurt) innocent tiavelers. He. says; "1 had ob.-el Veil at each dinner, of leu--', and they were froMueiit, when tho m-nu scra.i.oie tooK olaee. one car warn , : i h ",,UH "m'P 1 ,1"'1, ; ; .'ha,,ge,l cars at Uti ni u nice youn ,1 . ':,v ; !i I"" t"i:l",,'"n "f'S I V U ; ' .''! ,1. I stepped uj; ! ' i . 'l V " '"' ,,1,U''''.",,S " ;S : ; ' Vlf- Vi T'l anwl l 1 ' V'" U"y ,:u ( (1' r'id 'V"' 1"'0ml 1 f " "VI-" 1 "V'' !" ?;.,:,!r UM to the pla-tfurni of the ladies' car. .My old enemy was ho hini" in. ,l,,e "Is il..n t ,.,,,. . ... .,r.i i. . -ic-.i' . .... e-ei..so, p.iHini-. v r. u an mw iv i i apology to Mr,-. I'h'.i iiix for tlie great ili ! justice done to her charms by the adtnis--jsion, I re; lied yes.' .Judge of my hon or i when this low (inployic of a monopoli ; zing and umi'.eoiiimodating Ifailroad, ad ; uie.-od :: y co npaiiion w ith the tone ,uid I manner of uii old neiiuaintanee. "Wcl!. Sal, 1 guess you've done well, but I don't think his family will think much of thj match."" Kl.I.lU ANTS IN I Mil A. A allcUttU C'Ot re-pondoiit of tho New York Cummcruii; in giving an actotuit uf a isit to li.trracl. pore, says : "We .saw the. recently arrived eh ph.in ' t from Uunnah ; they lo'oked;in good condi tion. The;.: were ninety of them at th'. stables and many were traveling about l!.ivi;.h the diU'eivllt streets rmuh t j lim. a i iu.i ujioii oiiii of the lar-'est, w l,o ,t, i.i .,. ::. , , : . Km- ( ,.v . , v.-,,, ,i , o.irm: mi- ,o inimia iaai and some of them made us a salaam w ith th-ir t iniks when told to do so by theif I ki coo:-, or 'mahout' as the driver is' calied ! Thev me iiCeHieent animals. A storv wa-. told me o a number of elephants in one (,: t!m M-.'u--:l ili-tricts. One of them Imo s'.i.i'1'i.i'..-.l ;. fault in refusing to carry :i .- light a'i'.iiiion.d Linden, when told by the ma. . '.it that he would get extra grog fo; it. He was tried by court martial in the pit -once of twenty of his olephantin brethren r.nd convicted, and on tho ke. pel 's reading the sentence, all rained then tll.'.lks in achnow ledgi HKlit of its justice Another was appointed to flog him, which ho del hy giving him fifty h.sLes with his trunk, and the culprit leceived tho whoh meekly, well knowing ihut he deserved it They are very cunning as to WoLdim . ., , . , , .-,,.,, . u .i....r ...... ...... .- . ...... ii,,,, i.r, ,, u(- ,i in u h, and il there is an ounce short they will discover it and insist on the resulr.f allowance. When traveling they "en ii have a gallon ol giog per day, just us sail-' ors and soldiers have t heir glass. The- animals were at J'.arra.'kp'jro recruiting af. ter the voyage, and were soon to be sent, up tho country to d . service, in Knglai.d' oau-e. A 1'o'jR s was standin or part of.h hi.. An inquisitive Yankd ' at a tavern door, in tho low 'si'V. watching a funeral laiss by. At i ho h "l it was a large nmiiun cart, moving along very sloivly, and mak ing no effort to turn out of the procession. The Yankee was astonished at this '.van! of attention on the part of the driver of said cart, and turning to a l'hiladelphiaii who was standing by, he remarked : "'1 guess the folks ain't very perlitoa b'out here; to hum, where I jive, they a! iv ays turn out for a funeral." " h. that't part ) the procession," re marked tho Philadelphia!! oravelv. "Iu tell! Yooii don't s. iv so! HeowT" exclaini"d the astonished Yankee. "Why you si e, k is a very poor, sandy soil about here, an 1 nothing comes up they plant, tilde- they m ihurojt well ; so, when they bt:; y a fellow, tln-y throw a whole cart ioad iu the gnive to mak" him rise at the j:i Ignient day !" Tho Yankee n.i.ded. fayA kind hearted wife once waited upon a phsioiau to request him to pre eeribe for her hu-band's ryes which, were very soie. "Pet him wash them every inornin with braudv." A fe.v weeks after the doctor chanced t lueet the wife. "Well, has our husband followed mv advice.''' "He has ib no everything in his power to do it, doci ar, but ho never could gel the brandy hi -her than his mouth, poor fellow." An outside passenger of a couch had his hat blown over a bridge, und carried away by the stream, '..i . . i , .. . is it, not very singular, (said ho to a gentleman beside him,) that my hat took tnat direction r "Not at all, (said the other.) His natural for beaver to take water." A gentleman eomplained to old Banis- ' or !it s0tlle "'"''oious person had cut off i h!R hor.-'n tail, which, as he meant to sell